"Shot Heard Round the World" Echoes in Strong Local, State Opposition Across U.S. to New Nuclear Reactors

SACRAMENTO, Calif., June 5 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Ahead of the 20th anniversary on Saturday of Sacramento voters going to the polls to shut down Rancho Seco, a nuclear reactor operated by the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) about 25 miles southeast of the city, organizers held a news conference today to mark the event.

In his remarks at the news conference, Scott Denman, former executive director of the national Safe Energy Communication Council, emphasized that votes against nuclear power continue to this day.

Since the historic Rancho Seco shutdown vote, more than two dozen states have legislated or passed referenda requiring that utilities meet a specific target - usually ranging 10-30 percent of the electricity supply - for sustainable energy resources by a specific date, Denman said. Power that will be available from these "renewable portfolio standards" (RPS) sources is now routinely cited as a reason not to pursue more nuclear reactors.